Hey AL, B Fuct, what do you put in your tray around your rockwool cubes, hydrotron or do u put nothing.
Nothing in the trays.
The RW cubes are not put directly in the trays. They are in pots filled with absorbent media. Each pot is filled with about 25-50mm of tightly packed rockwool in the bottom of each pot with the remainder filled with
Fytocell.
This is an older pic. Since Fytocell has a tendency to escape the pot drain holes, in this pic, each pot has a knee-hi stocking over it to keep Fytocell crumbs from washing into the tray. This didn't work so well. Fytocell also has a tendency to float. In later batches, I put in the layer of tightly packed RW floc in the bottom of each pot both to keep the Fytocell in the pots and keep the pots from floating Once wetted, the RW floc is heavy enough to keep pots from floating.
Also I bought an RO system and the hydro system has a 35 gallon res. I know it takes like 3 gallons of water to make one gallon of water with the RO system or something like that. Is it still cheaper to used the RO system instead of buying water from walmart or somewhere?
How about you just use tapwater? It's served me well for about 20 years.
There's just no need for RO or other heroically filtered water. Chlorine is the indoor grower's friend, suppressing pathogens in rez tanks for a couple of days until the chlorine evaporates. After then, you must use an anti-microbial agent like H2O2 to keep your nutrient soup from being a friendly home to pathogens. Minerals like calcium and magnesium found in tapwater are essential micronutrients, which if they were not in the water would need to be added anyway.
Some folks will maintain that chlorination will kill beneficial microbes in soil. Do you like this 12ft tall cherry tomato plant I grew in my organic veg patch out back last season?
Grown mainly with municipal water right out of the tap. This
single plant yielded more than 450 fruit. If tapwater is bad for plants, this plant was ASTONISHINGLY successfully fooled!
Don't waste your money on fancy water. Municipal tapwater is fine.